Heritage Projects

The South Georgia Museum is a hub of exciting heritage projects:

The human history of South Georgia is one of scientific exploration, bravery, endurance, inginuity and sadly the industrial scale hunting of whales and seals for their oil and other products. The lessons of the past must not be forgotten if we are to proceed wisely into the future.

Old Grytviken. Photo Sandefjord Whaling Museum.

One of our main aims is to preserve, protect and promote an understanding of the historical heritage of South Georgia in relation to the island’s whaling, sealing, scientific and maritime history.

Below are a few examples of our ongoing work in this area. We will be entering a new invigorated phase of this shortly.

Sir Ernest Shackleton’s connection with South Georgia.

Staff at the South Georgia Museum, which we help to support, maintain Shackleton’s grave, which is found in the cemetery next to the whaling station at Grytviken.

James Caird in Carr Maritime Gallery South Georgia Museum. Photo courtesy of the museum.

A replica of the James Caird, the lifeboat used by Shackleton and five of his men to traverse the Southern Ocean from Elephant Island to South Georgia, was purchased by our sister organization and brought to the island, where it is now a much-visited exhibit in the new Carr Maritime Gallery at the South Georgia Museum. The replica was originally made as part of the IMAX film “Shackleton’s Antarctic Adventure”.

Industrial Heritage

Artefacts

We ensure that artefacts from the island’s sealing and whaling industries are conserved to illustrate the lessons to be learned from this period of history.

History Projects

The project was a major initiative to document South Georgia’s whaling history through the eyes of the people who worked in the industry on and around the island.

Members of the Salvesen Ex Whalers Club with Elsa Davidson. Photo courtesy South Georgia Museum.

Our Norwegian associates undertook the restoration of the whaling manager’s villa at Husvik, completing the work early in 2008. Scientists and expeditions now use the villa as a base for research and exploration of the island’s interior.